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Demi Lovato Gets Real About How Hollywood’s Beauty Ideals Fueled Her Eating Disorder: ‘You Start to Pick Yourself Apart’

Demi Lovato is reflecting on how Hollywood’s rigid beauty ideals fueled her eating disorder as a young actress.

In a recent interview with TODAY’s Savannah Sellers, the actress, singer, and mental health advocate opened up about her recovery journey. When Lovato first sought treatment for her eating disorder, she was 18 years old and already a prominent Disney Channel star.

“I [got help for] my eating disorder, and I went for self-harm and emotional issues. And when I came out with that experience, I was faced with the decision of either ‘keep your mouth shut and not say anything’ or ‘share your experience strength and hope with another person in hopes that it affects them in a positive way,'” she recalled.

Lovato, now 30, chose the latter option, but it took years of suffering for her to even reach out for help. In fact, she believes growing up in the public eye had a “really negative impact” on her mental health, which eventually fed into her eating disorder.

“When you’re looking at images of people with perfect bodies, you start to look at yourself, and you start to pick yourself apart,” she said. “It’s hard to grow up in a world where that’s right in front of your face and at your fingertips at all times. I grew up in a period of time where young Hollywood was very, very, very thin, and that was the look.”

Luckily, these toxic standards of beauty no longer run Lovato’s life. The singer is doing much better now. She even told Sellers that she’s working on a “happy rock album,” which she’s found “kind of challenging” as someone who has historically struggled so much.

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